Back at the airport again this week – this time Terminal five at Heathrow when I was on my way out the other weekend. I don’t fly from Heathrow that often, and the last two times have both been T5 – and I’ve been disappointed in the books (especially compared to Birmingham) both times.
This is the new airport fiction section – I’ve already got the Emily Henry on a Kindle deal or I would have bought that, and that was about it for me – as I’ve decided the Anthony Horowitz is far too big to read in a physical copy so I’m waiting for a deal on the e-book.
Thankfully they did have the new Richard Cole’s which I had been hoping for, and the I struggled with what to get for the second part of the offer. I have two of the Follet Valley’s waiting to be read so I couldn’t justify another without having read some of the previous.
So that left the non fiction which majored heavily on the self help, biography and war history. I went for the Otto English in the end because it was the most appealing but I can’t lie, I was hoping for more, particularly on the fiction side.
So I wandered into Foyles on the way to a West End theatre last week and spotted a few interesting things and so here I am.
The first was the third in Andrew Cartmel’s Paperback Sleuth series, Like a Bullet, which was out on the shelves a little early. Sidenote: I both love and hate when that happens. I love it when it’s not something I’ve pre-ordered, I hate it when it is, especially when it’s a day or two before release and I’m in London and the pre-ordered copy is going to arrive at my house while I’m away. This has happened more than once. Anyway, this was out on the shelves super early because it’s still not officially out (the publication date is Tuesday coming) and yet I still managed to resist it, despite the fact I love reading something early, because I still haven’t read book two in the series, and I like to read in order as you know.
Next up is the new book from Alicia Thompson, Never Been Shipped. And I want to say that her publishers are doing a great job with her covers because at this point I think I own three of her books and I haven’t read any of them and I had to resist buying this one hard on that front. And it’s because the covers are so gorgeous they just make you pick the books up and then the blurbs are great too. This one came out at the start of June and once again I am tempted!
I also managed to resist this Dan Jones. I hadn’t seen it before; but it looks like Summer of Blood is actually a much older book of his and possibly getting a fresh lease of life because of his successful historical fiction books. And in fact the final book in that trilogy is out at the end of July. Anyway, the fourteenth century is a bit earlier than my main areas of interest when it comes to history, but Dan Jones is so good that I do often make an exception for him. But there are huge numbers of nonfiction books on the tbr pile at the moment so I stayed strong.
As you know, I’m always looking for new mystery series to read (thank you for those recommendations last week by the way) and this was the book that stood out to me in the crime and thriller section this time. It’s got a gorgeous cover and the plot summary is also intriguing: it’s set I. The 1920s and has a bank clerk trying to solve a murder while trying not to get in trouble with the law himself because of his sexuality. The blurb says it’s perfect for fans of Nicola Upson’s Josephine Tey series and given that I read the final three of those that I hadn’t read last month that is clearly me.
And finally here’s that new paperback of the first Tuga book in the flesh. It definitely feels like a tropical holiday and it’s a style I like but I also think it’s a better representation of what the vibe of the book is than the original one did, even if that was pretty too. that’s the lot for now. In some ways the bookshop trip was better than the show I went to afterwards. It was certainly cheaper!
Did you read Miffy books when you were little? I definitely did, so I was astonished to learn that she’s 70, but delighted to mooch around the pop up in Foyles!
I was very, very tempted by a lamp, I think it would look great in my home office. Just a lovely touch to make it even more me…
I also loved the artwork inspired toys. Vermeer Miffy or Van Gogh Miffy? No – definitely Degas Miffy for the win.
I mean who knew there was this much Miffy stuff? I could have spent a tonne but luckily for my wallet (and for Him Indoors), I was on my way to the theatre and didn’t want to be taking bags in there and didn’t have any space in my suitcase either!
My willpower was sorely tempted by the Foyles tote though, but I’m banned from more tote bags, so I stayed strong!
It’s the end of Independent Bookshop Week today, and given how much I love a bookshop, it would be remiss of me not to mention it, and also to drop some links to my posts about Indies I’ve been to, and also some of the ones that are on my list for a visit!
In my regular visiting spots we have Bookends/Bookcase in Carlisle and then the various Daunts in London near where I work and stay – Marylebone and Cheapside. There are also still a few second hand bookshops on Charing Cross Road, but a lot less than there used to be. London has now got a romance specialist bookshop, Saucy Books, which is over in Notting Hill so I’m going to have to head over there soon.
And of course if you’re in the South West, you need to be going to Persephone.
If you’ve got some more book shop recommendations, whack them in the comments.
Happy Saturday everyone, I’ve been to a new bookshop!
I was in Angel for an event and took the chance to dive into Upper Street bookshop on my way back to Central London, and of course I bought books…
Let’s start with the fact that I really liked the selection of books. They had the popular stuff that I was expecting but alongside some stuff I hadn’t seen before too.
I’m particularly talking about the non-fiction selection where there was some really interesting stuff that I hadn’t seen anywhere else. I mean I’m sure they had it, but just not on the first table inside the door. And yes this is the selection where I found the books bought!
I love a blind date with a book stand too – and outside is great. I have so many books that I don’t dare buy them though because when I have I always get a book I already have! I had a lovely time wandering around, if I have a criticism, it’s that I would like a better romance selection and more crime and mystery books (that aren’t in the blind date section) but I could say that about a lot of bookshops and I get that they have to stock what they sell.
I’ve been wandering the bookshops again in search of new books to add to the ever expanding want to read list on Goodreads, and I’m back with my results. The good news is that they’re all hardbacks, so I was able to resist buying them because of a) price and b) the fact that hardbacks impulse buys sit on my shelves for a lot longer than paperbacks. And paperbacks can sit there for a long time…
Honestly non-fiction hardbacks are the hardest thing for me to resist, but also the things that take me longest to read. Here you can see the new Hallie Rubenhold which I mentioned in my 2025 preview back in January, but also Edward White’s Dianaworld which I hadn’t heard about until I saw it in the store – and then came home to find a review of it in the latest Literary Review which only made me want to read it more. I also hadn’t come across The Fall of the House of Montague before and that looks right up my street too – it’s all about the collapse of the fortunes of the Dukes and Earls of Manchester across four generations. I’m also tempted by The Dream Factory, but given that I already have at least four books about Shakespeare (or his plays) on the bookshelf waiting to be read I didn’t even let myself pick it up!
This selection of hardback fiction was facing the entrance – I really want to read the Emily Henry but I’m restraining myself because I’m fairly convinced there will be an airport paperback version of this that I can buy next time I fly somewhere, if there isn’t a deal on the ebook first. Open Heaven is described as “heartrending” and I think we know I’m not in the market for that, the Isabel Allende sounds interesting, but I still have at least one of hers on the Kindle waiting to be read but the Sayaka Murata sounds interesting – about a world where most babies are conceived by artificial insemination and marriages are sexless – but also I’m still not in the market for dystopian future stories!
And then finally we’ve got Julie Chan is Dead in the wild, The Marble Hall Murders – which like the Emily Henry I’m hoping will have an airport paperback version (although it is huge and possibly unmanageable as a physical copy), and the new S J Parris which is the start of a new series and which I have on my kindle waiting for me to read. Apart from that we have a few thrillers that are clearly too scary for me and Fair Play by Louise Hegarty which is a murder mystery where two thirds of the blurb sounds like I would like it and then the final sentence makes me wonder: Louise Hegarty’s Fair Play is the puzzle-box story that brilliantly lays bare the real truth of life – the terrifying mystery of grief.
I’m sure you didn’t think that I was going to do a whole week based around the seaside without giving you a bookshop visit did you? In fact it was one of the first places that we went after we arrived – as we walked past it on our way from the railway station to the seafront and of course the early visit meant I could leave the purchases at the hotel along with my rucksack so I didn’t have to carry them all around with me!
Lets start with the fact that this is a big store, over a lot of floors and they’ve got a really large selection of new hardback fiction right as you come in the door. And as ever, I’m focussing this post on the stuff that interests me – that I read and that I’ve been looking out for and not on the whole store! Brighton has got quite a distinct identity – it was the first place to elect an MP from the Green Party back in 2010, it’s got lots of students and a large LGBTQIA community so I was interested to see their book selections.
And across those new fiction shelves, as well as recent releases I’ve read and written about, like the Curtis Sittenfeld short stories collection and The Rest of Our Lives, there’s also stuff on my pile like The Three Lives of Cate Kay and books that I’ve seen reviewed in the latest edition of Literary Review like Call Me Ishmaelle and the new Katie Kitamura.
And the table next to it has got the really new stuff – like that third Magpie Murders, which I really want to read but is Very Very Big in hardback and so I’m going to have to wait for the Kindle edition to drop to a sensible price. And there’s also the new Gregory Maguire on the far left there – Elphie – where he’s returning to the world he created in Wicked although I have to say I thought he’d covered Elphaba’s childhood in that but it’s a long, long time since I (tried to) read that.
I am of course all about the crime at the moment because romance moving towards Romantasy and contemporary romance having ever younger protagonists is not really what I want right now, so here we have some mystery books. And I was impressed/horrified at how many of this lot I’ve read already – or have on the pile. ON this side I’ve read the SJ Bennet, the Richard Osman and the Anthony Horowitz and I have the Golden Spoon and Vera Wong (as previously mentioned) on the Kindle waiting to be read. I also want to read Displeasure Island which is the sequel to Grave Expectations, but haven’t bought it yet.
Even more crime here – and my hit rate is lower, but it does include one of my purchases which was of course A Case of Mice and Murder – but also Seven Lively Suspects and another Canon Clement along with a bunch of covers that look too dark for me, although I am trying to adjust my snap judgments on that front after Ruth Galloway.
And finally, this had the new Vinyl Detective which I would have bought and read if my pre-order wasn’t already at home and the final Maisie Dobbs which is now out in paperback. I was going to do the romance section, but basically, I’d read so few of them that it felt a little bit pointless. I would say I should try and change that, but we all know how big my To-Read Pile is right now so I’m not making any promises.
As we all know book trends swing back and forth – and things fall in and out of fashion, and wandering around bookshops you notice things changing. Over the last couple of years we’ve seen things like the change in romance covers to the illustrated ones that started with Leni Kauffman’s covers for people like Olivia Dade and Ashley Herring Blake, but now stretches to almost every romance. Some times it from reading the blurbs – and noticing that the age of the protagonists is going down and most of romance is essntially now what was New adult. Or that there are less and less historicals – even though Bridgerton is massive.
And that leads me to the point of this post: Foyles have swapped the Crime/mystery section and the sci fi fantasy section over – and now the crime is the smaller area. And yes I did count. Last time I was in here – and in fact as long as I can remember – this area above was the crime and mystery section.
It’s a straight switch – Crime is now wrapping around the outside. What’s made the difference here? Romantasy. It’s all the romantasy books I think. The romance section is still mostly contemporary and historical and they’ve put all the romantasy in here with the more traditional (so to speak) Fantasy. And there’s a really interesting article about Fantasy and Romantasy here from Reactor.
And I did have a root around and had my first sighting in the wild of the new Penguin Classic Edition of Terry Pratchett’s Night Watch. Which I nearly bought but managed to resist this time!
I’ve been wandering around bookshops again… and this time it’s an indie: Quinns Bookshop in Market Harborough. And I’m going to call this one small but perfectly formed, because it’s got a really well chosen selection in quite a small space.
This is the delightful window table display – you’ll spot a few that I’ve read there – like A Case of Mice and Murder and The Cracked Mirror– and real mix of other things, including a couple of tasters of new releases in Murders at Gull’s Nest and 10 Marchfield Square. Murder at Gull’s Nest is a 1950s-set, seaside murder mystery featuring a former nun and 10 Marchfield Square is a cozy mystery set in a small residential square in London that says it’s The Maid meets Only Murders in the Building. So I think we can agree that I’m probably going to read both of those at some point. But I’m really trying hard not to buy hardback fiction at the moment.
Opposite the window display we’ve got some paperback fiction, including The Ministry of Time (Which I really need to get around to) and The Cat Who Saved the Library (which I read the other week) and the intriguing looking The Cautious Traveller’s Guide to the Wasteland, which is a fantasy novel about a trip on the Great Trans-Siberian Express between Beijing and Moscow.
I find the easiest way for me to assess bookshops on this front is the Crime selection – because it’s where I’m reading most and a lot of what I read is relatively recently published. And you can see they’ve got the crime sign up in the back corner there, and I was really impressed with this – there’s a stuff from the authors that you’ll see all over the place, some less obvious stuff that I haven’t come across or seen around before and then some stuff that I’ve read from authors or series that you don’t see in shops with selections of this size as much – or don’t see in hardcopy much at all.
And if you’re wondering: yes I did nearly by a paperback copy of a book I had in the kindle backlog that I had never seen in the flesh before. It would not be the first time, but I ended up buying something completely fresh to me – I could tell it wasn’t the first in the series, but I liked the sample that I read so I bought it any way!
They’ve also got an art section and some lovely bookish gifts – I bought some wrapping paper but it was hard to resist the tote bags. Basically the only thing that stopped me was the fact that I’ve got so very, very many of them and Him Indoors is getting antsy about the numbers lingering around the house. And he’s already ignoring the to-read shelf overspill so I can’t try it on too much…
We’ve been taking advantage of the nicer weather and the early starts on a Sunday for flyaway start to the Formula One and MotoGP seasons to go and do some of the (relatively) local National Trust and English Heritage properties. And so of course I’ve been in the gift shops and looking at what books are on offer so that I could report back. And voila!
Lets start with English Heritage’s Kirby Hall. It’s a very small shop and this was about it – Kirby Hall is mostly in ruins and so it’s a spend a couple of hours here, doesn’t have a cafe sort of property. I don’t have a photo of the shelves on the left for some reason, but you can see the Collins guide to English Castles and there were a couple of DK kids books too along with puzzle books and the like for children. Kirby Hall was built in the Tudor period, so it’s no surprise that their main offer for adults is around the Tudors. And we’ve got a couple of overview books for the period as well as a Henry VIII biography from a respected historian and two of Alison Weir’s Tudor Novels (as opposed to her non-fiction works).
Next up we have National Trust and their selection at Baddesley Clinton. This is a much bigger property – the house has been there since the medieval period but was still lived in into the twentieth century (albeit with loads of changes over the years) and it’s got gardens, a lake and a stable and barn complex that’s been turned into a cafe, gift shop, plant shop and second hand book shop. It’s also not far from Birmingham and has a lot of visitors
Most of the shop is the usual mix of local food and drink gifts, outdoors-y things and National trust merch, but they’ve also got these two cases of books. And as you can see it’s a lot of cookbooks, puzzle books and gardening books with a few National Trust books that round up their properties on various fronts – I’ll admit I was tempted by National Trust on Screen which is a guide to their properties that have been most used in television and movies. But I had already bought three books, because the reason that there isn’t any fiction really here is….
The second-hand bookshop. This is just one bit of it – the crime section – and as you can maybe tell it’s in the old stables, with the horse stalls used to separate out the different types of books. This was a fairly ok split between non-fiction and fiction, and all of my purchases came in the crime section – mostly because I went through that bit first and they wanted cash, which I was running out of! It’s always interesting to see what crops up in these NT book shops – it can sometimes be brilliant, but you can also get the shops that have loads and loads of (probably) out of date non-fiction or very aged and worthy classics and almost antiquarian books which are not at all my thing. This one was somewhere in the middle – three books that I bought, but nothing that I could find in any of the series that I’m trying to pick up at the moment.
So there you are – a tale of two bookshops. I’ve got a list of places that I want to go to this year so hopefully I’ll be able to report back on some more as the summer arrives.